Febrile Infection-Related Epilepsy Syndrome (FIRES): A Literature Review and Case Study.

Journal: The Neurodiagnostic Journal
Published:
Abstract

Febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome (FIRES) is a catastrophic epileptic syndrome that strikes previously healthy children aged 3-15 years and has an unknown pathogenesis and few treatments. These children experience a nonspecific febrile illness that is followed by prolonged refractory status epilepticus. Although the etiology is unknown, FIRES has a biphasic presentation, with the acute phase beginning as seizure activity lasting 1-12 weeks, then followed by the chronic phase, which is characterized by refractory seizures that cluster every 2-4 weeks, and may continue to be multifocal and independent. Treatment of FIRES is difficult, typically unresponsive to antiepileptic drugs. Some children resolve temporarily with drug-induced burst suppression comas. Other therapies such as a ketogenic diet have limited benefit. The outcome varies with the length of the acute phase and is usually poor, with up to 30% of cases ending in death and 66-100% of survivors having intellectual disability. The authors present a case of a 6-year-old child presenting with FIRES and refractory status epilepticus, which continued despite multidrug therapy. The patient underwent immunomodulatory therapy with the eventual resolution of status, but she developed a chronic, moderately severe encephalopathy, including intractable epilepsy. This case highlights the challenges of FIRES and the potential of immunomodulatory therapies for children with this disorder.

Authors
Kristy Fox, Mary Wells, Michael Tennison, Bradley Vaughn